Tag Archives: ferroelectric

Some experts predict it will be at least another decade before new memory technologies offer the low prices and wide availability to compete with NAND-based flash memory. Nonetheless, it’s worthwhile to look at potential NAND-flash successors, including phase-change RAM (PRAM), resistive RAM (ReRAM), and magnetoresistive RAM (MRAM).

In December’s Circuit Cellar magazine, now available online, Faiz Rahman describes and compares the newest memory technologies available for embedded systems.

“I cover only those devices that are now commercially available, but bear in mind that many other technologies are being hotly pursued in academic and corporate research labs worldwide,” says Rahman, an Ohio University visiting professor who received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from Imperial College, London.

For example, last summer MIT Technology Review reported on a startup company’s testing of crossbar memory. The new technology, according to an August 14, 2013, article written by Tom Simonite, can store data 40 times as densely as the most compact memory available and is faster and more energy-efficient.

Here are the commercially-available technologies Rahman considers and some of his insights. (For the full article with more details, including an update on manufacturers of the latest memory devices, check out the December issue.)

PHASE-CHANGE RAMOne of the most interesting memory types to emerge in recent years is one that stores data as order or disorder in small islands of a special material. The structural transition

The structure of phase-change RAM cells in reset and set states is shown.

between ordered and disordered phases is driven by controlled heating of the material island…

There have been several recent advances in phase-change RAM (PRAM) technology. Perhaps the most remarkable is the ability to control the cell-heating current precisely enough to create several intermediate cell-resistance values. This immediately increases the memory capacity as each cell can be made to store more than one bit. For example, if eight resistance values can be created and distinguished, then the cell can be used to store three bits, thus tripling the memory capacity. This is now a routinely used technique implemented with PRAM devices.

MAGNETORESISTIVE RAMWe have all wished for a computer with no start-up delay that could be ready to use almost as soon as it was powered up. Such a computer will need to use an inexpensive

A spin-torque magnetoresistive RAM cell’s structure includes a free layer, a tunnel barrier, and a fixed layer.

but fast nonvolatile memory. This combination is difficult to come by, but proponents of magnetoresistive RAM (MRAM) think boot times could soon become outdated as this new memory becomes a mature product….

MRAM’s nonvolatility alone will not make it a potential game-changing technology. Its high-access speed is what makes it special. Unlike other nonvolatile memory (e.g., EEPROMs and flash), MRAM boasts typical access speeds of 35 ns and potentially as short as 4 ns, with further developments. This combined with MRAM’s extremely high endurance and data retention periods of more than 20 years even makes the technology suitable for use as CPU cache memories, which is a very demanding application.

One further advantage of MRAM is that its basic architecture—where the access transistor can be formed directly on top of the magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ)—enables very dense integration, greatly reducing the cost of storage per bit and making MRAM well suited foruse in solid-state disks.

FERROELECTRIC RAMIn many ways, DRAM is an example of an ideal memory, if it weren’t for its volatility… The problem is that the charge stored in a DRAM cell tends to disappear due to self-discharge

A ferroelectric RAM cell’s organizational structure is shown.

after only a few milliseconds. This means that all DRAM chips have to be periodically read and every cell’s state must be restored every few milliseconds. The requirement for periodic “refresh” operations increases the power consumption of DRAM banks, in addition to endangering data integrity in the case of even short power supply dips.

Within this backdrop, ferroelectric RAM (FRAM) became a potential game changer when it was introduced in the early 1990s…The permanence of induced electrical polarization in ferroelectric capacitors endows FRAMs with their nonvolatility. To write a particular bit, a FRAM’s cell capacitor is briefly charged in one direction to polarize the ferroelectric material between its plates. The capacitor voltage can then be removed and the bit state will be retained in the directional sense of the dielectric material’s polarization. No charges may leak away, and the polarization can be maintained for many years making FRAM, in a sense, a nonvolatile analog of DRAM….

A big advantage of using FRAM in microcontrollers is that just one memory can be used for program, data, and information storage instead of having to use separate flash, SRAM, and EEPROM blocks, which has been the trend so far.

utilizes materials and structures where suitable voltages can alter memory cells’ resistive states so they can store one or more data bits, similar to PRAM.

There are strong hints that ReRAM is capable of very fast switching with symmetric read and write times of less than 10 ns. This comes with a remarkably low power consumption, which should make this technology ideal for many applications.

As if these attributes were not enough, ReRAM cells are very small and can be placed extremely close together, which results in high-density memory fabrics.

Rahman’s article also introduces manufacturers offering products with the latest memory technologies, but he declares no single memory device the best. Despite manufacturers extolling their particular products, those that succeed will need to be available in high volume and at low cost, he says. They also must offer high-storage densities, he says, a bar most new memory technologies struggle to reach.